Local Government Act 2002 (New Zealand)

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Local Government Act 2002
Parliament of New Zealand
Image:Coat of arms of New Zealand.png
Long title: '
Introduced by: Sandra Lee
Dates
Date passed: 7 December 2002
Date of Royal Assent: 24 December 2002
Commencement: 1 July 2003
Other legislation
Amendments: 2006
Related legislation: Local Government Act of 1974
Status: Current legislation


The Local Government Act 2002 of New Zealand is an Act of New Zealand's Parliament. Local Government is divided into 73 local areas with an elected Mayor and Councillors. Groupings of Local Authority's come under 12 Regional Authorities. Local and Regional Authority are defined by the Local Government Act 2002.

Contents

In December 1999 Sandra Lee was appointed Local Government Minister in the Labour-Alliance coalition government. Lee rewrote the Local Government Act of 1974 so that it was readable to the general public and addressed matters that had come up in the intervening 28 years.

The Local Government Act 2002 included a focus on sustainability with the reference to the 'four well-beings' social, economic, environmental and cultural. The purpose of the Act is (a) to enable democratic decision-making and action by, and on behalf of, communities; and (b) to promote the social, economic, environmental, and cultural well-being of communities, in the present and in the future. The Local Government Act 2002 received the Royal assent 24 December 2002.

The Special Consultative Procedure (SPC) is a key part of the Local Government Act 2002 which must be used when changes to the Long Term Council Community Plan (LTCCP) are to be made. SPC is triggered by the significance policy stated in the LTCCP and even changes to the significance policy must happen by way of SPC.

All by-law introductions, amendments or omissions are made using the SPC. The SPC is used when changes in level of service happen in the LTCCP or when significance levels are reached of a percentage of revenue or a few people are affected a greatly or many people are affected generally by the proposal. By-law changes and updates must happen under the SCP provisions in preparation for all by-laws being through the SPC by June 30, 2008.

All by-laws must keep current and be not older than 10 years with out a SPC taking place to keep by-laws current. Transparency in the processes of Council is facilitated by the SPC safeguards in the Act. New Zealand's Local and Regional Authority will have its first full LTCCP, with Community Outcomes,complete from each district by 31 July 2006 when they will be required to have passed through the SCP and be lodged in the Parliamentary Library in Wellington. Once this process is complete the use of the SCP will become regularly used in updating the LTCCP and any major changes that happen to come along.

In SCP a statement of proposal and a summary of the Statement of Proposal is a required to go out for community feedback. The draft full document requires not less than one month for public submissions to be sent into council. These submission can be heard in person if the submitter wishes and full council listens and consults on all submissions in making a decision over the draft proposal. Once passed the document is no longer draft and the SPC requirement has been satisfied.

In Consultation outside the SCP which happens with the Community Outcomes process the principles of consultation remain the same as stated in the Act and are a major focus of all consultation with the community in Local Government under the Local Government Act 2002.

Community Outcomes are statements that are derived from full consultation with stakeholders in the community and happen at least once every six years. Each District and Region has Community Outcomes that the community has decide upon. Community Outcomes are a requirement of the Local Government Act 2002.

By 31 July 2006 the Long Term Council Community Plans 2006 - 2016 will be in the Parliamentary Library for 86 Territorial Authorities. The Community Outcomes will be printed in this document for each area. It was optional until 2006 and now Community Outcomes are a must. Eleven LTA did not comply with pre-Audit requirements and whether they will make the deadline is not yet known. Three others will not have sign off by full Council by 30 June 2006 and this will have spending implications for the councils until sign off does happen.

Section 92 of the Local Government Act 2002 requires measures and indicators, not less than once every 3 years, on the progress of the community towards the Community Outcomes is reported. Debate around weather it is from a regional perspective or from the location of the community outcome area perspective will take a number of years and three yearly cycles to resolve.

It is suggested that the Minister's intent at the time of drafting the Act was clearly for it to be locally focused. A local focus to support the people who develop the community outcomes to self determine what is best for the area in which they live and work.

The name of this document or report is the State of the District Report (SOD). Base line reports are being made by some counci's before to measure progress by. An example of a good local authority base line SOD is South Waikato District Council State of the District Report.

The unfoldment of the Local Government Act 2002 required that a Long Term Council Community Plan (LTCCP)2004-2014 be prepared by all the Local and Regional Councils of New Zealand. Next in the LGA 2002 was the consultation process to identity the Community Outcomes of the District. The Community Outcomes did not belong to Council but were a Community's District Outcomes. The LGA 2002 stated that the LTCCP 2006-2016 was required to have the District's Community Outcomes included at this time. The Community Outcome progress is reported at least every three years and at least once every six years the full round of consultation to identify the Community Outcomes must happen. Each LTCCP is audited by the Auditor General every three years.

Progress of the community in their Community Outcomes are to be reported at least once every 3 years with the first deadline being 2009. The report of this community progress can be known as the State of the District Report. Measures and Indicators to this end are developed around measurement and reporting on progress to the community outcomes. A whole science is developing around where the attribution of outputs lays with regards to the outcomes being advanced. The question in the State of the District report is which part of the community's outputs contribute to the community outcomes and by how much if any.

Bylaws are required to be consulted upon using the Special Consultative Procedure in the Local Government Act 2002. All bylaws must be consulted with by the community by June 30, 2008. No bylaws may be older than 10 years without needing to return to the community again for consultation.

August 2006 the Government agreed to have an independent enquiry for Local Government Rates.

Local government elections occur every three years. October 2007 is the next round of local government elections. The 2007 elections will be the first conducted where the Community Outcomes are fully integrated into the Long Term Council Community Plan and audited for this purpose. All territorial authorities must have Community Outcomes printed and integrated into the LTCCP 2006-2016.

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